When President Thomas Jefferson considered a potential leader for an
expedition across the continent to the Pacific Coast in 1803, he
looked no farther than his personal secretary, Meriwether Lewis.
"It was impossible to find a character," wrote Jefferson, "who to
a compleat science in botany, natural history, mineralogy & astronomy,
joined the firmness of constitution & character, prudence, habits
adapted to the woods, & a familiarity with the Indian manners &
character, requisite for this undertaking. All the latter qualifications
Capt. Lewis has." Who was Meriwether Lewis, what events led him
to the point of enjoying the President's complete confidence, and
what happened to him after the famous expedition which bears his
name?

The future explorer was born to William and
Lucy Meriwether Lewis on August 18, 1774 on the family plantation
"Locust Hill" in Albemarle County, Virginia. The Lewis family also
had a daughter, Jane, who was born in 1770, and another son, Reuben,
born in 1777. Young Meriwether and his siblings did not see much
of their father, who actively fought the British during the Revolutionary
War. The elder Lewis periodically visited while on leave, but after
falling from a horse into a flooded river, he caught pneumonia and
died. A short time later, Lucy married Capt. John Marks.

Meriwether Lewis spent much of his time as
a youth in the outdoors, and developed an interest in plants, animals,
and geology. When Lewis was eight or nine years old, his family
moved to a colony on the Broad River in northeastern Georgia. In
the four years he lived there he honed his wilderness skills and
became proficient with a black powder rifle. He returned to Virginia
at age 13 for formal schooling and to learn to administer the family
plantation of nearly 2,000 acres, which was worked by 24 slaves.

Over the next few years Lewis was taught
by a variety of schoolmasters and tutors, but his schooling came
to an abrupt end in 1792 when his stepfather died, his mother moved
back to Virginia, and at the age of 18 he began to actively manage
Locust Hill. He spent two years on the plantation, where he grew
tobacco, corn, and wheat. Life as a planter had its challenges and
rewards, but Lewis was striving for other things. He enlisted as
a private in the Virginia Volunteer Corps during the Whiskey Rebellion
of 1794, telling his mother that he wanted "to support the glorious
cause of liberty, and my country." During his service he saw a good
deal of unfair treatment of enlisted men by officers, who sometimes
didn’t provide the soldiers with proper clothing, equipment, and
food.

Despite the drawbacks of military life, Lewis
must have liked something about the army, for on May 1, 1795, he
joined the regular U.S. Army at the rank of Ensign. His enlistment
came at a time when the United States military was dwindling from
5,424 officers and men to a total strength of only 3,359. Lewis
met many officers in this tiny army who made an impression upon
him, few more so than a fellow Virginian named William Clark, who
commanded the Chosen Rifle Company of elite rifleman-sharpshooters.
After six months of serving in the military together, Clark resigned
his commission because of family and health problems.

Thomas Jefferson.

By 1799, Lewis had been appointed to a lieutenancy
and was posted at Charlottesville, Virginia, where he was in charge
of recruiting duty. Due to decreasing military enlistment, in 1800
the army moved him to Detroit where he assumed the post of regimental
paymaster. In this position he traveled to different posts throughout
the trans-Appalachian frontier, which allowed him to make many contacts
with the key officers in the army at that time. On December 30,
1800, Lewis was promoted to the rank of Captain. Well-known for
his accuracy, thoroughness, and honesty, he came to the attention
of Thomas Jefferson, the newly-elected
President of the United States, who on February 23, 1801 wrote to
Lewis, asking him to become his personal secretary. At a salary
of $500 per year, plus room and board in the White House, the offer
was not to be refused, and Lewis accepted "with pleasure," promising
to "get forward to the City of Washington with all possible despatch."

During Lewis' service as the President's
secretary, he learned about diplomacy, statesmanship, and national
policy from a master politician. Meanwhile, Jefferson came to look
upon Lewis as the finest candidate to lead a government-sponsored
scientific and diplomatic expedition across the continent, an expedition
Jefferson had proposed several times over the course of a ten-year
period. The president knew Lewis’ strengths and weaknesses, and
to groom the young man for the expedition had him tutored by the
finest minds in the United States, including Dr. Benjamin Rush,
a prominent Philadelphia physician, Dr. Benjamin Smith Barton, a
professor and botanist, Dr. Caspar Wistar, the foremost authority
on fossils of the time, and David Rittenhouse, America's most famous
astronomer and mathematician. As the time approached for launching
the expedition, Jefferson drafted a set of detailed instructions
for Lewis which outlined the importance of the journey and Jefferson's
goals for it. Lewis also received permission to choose a co-captain
to assist him with the responsibilities of managing men and supplies,
making maps, and meeting with American Indian tribes, while recording
the details in daily journal entries. For this important post Lewis
turned to his old army friend William Clark.

Clark spent the winter of 1804 establishing
a training camp for the "Corps of Discovery" at Camp Wood, which
was located 18 miles north of St. Louis at the confluence of the
Mississippi and Missouri Rivers. Meanwhile, Lewis was in St. Louis,
Cahokia, and Kaskaskia
arranging for supplies and equipment for the journey. Lewis also
spent time obtaining information about the newly acquired Louisiana
Territory through people who were involved with the fur trade on
the Missouri River and who had dealings with the Native Americans
who lived there.

On May 14, 1804, the Corps of Discovery,
led by William Clark, set out on their journey up the Missouri River.
Lewis traveled overland from St. Louis to join the group on the
second day of the trip, when they reached St. Charles. Meriwether
Lewis was 30 years old during that first summer of the expedition,
while Clark was 34. They were young men pursuing the dream of their
President, serving as his eyes and ears while trying to survive
to tell the story. A year and a half and more than 4,000 miles later,
the expedition reached the Pacific Ocean. Lewis was fascinated with
the Native Americans, plants, animals, fossils, geological formations,
topography and other facets of the trip, all of which he recorded
in his journal entries. Even with all of this information, new to
science, Lewis was plagued with the minor failures of his journey.
He had failed to discover an all-water route to the Pacific Ocean,
and also failed to set up diplomatic alliances with American Indian
people to create an exclusive Rocky Mountain fur trade for the United
States.

The expedition ended at St. Louis in 1806,
and Lewis returned to Washington, D.C. to report to President Jefferson
in person. Both Lewis and Clark were rewarded for their success.
Meriwether Lewis was appointed to the governorship of the Louisiana
Territory, while William Clark became the Indian Agent for the far
west. Lewis returned to St. Louis to assume his new office. While
attending to his duties as governor, Lewis planned to find an editor
and publisher for the expedition journals, but there always seemed
to be more pressing business to attend to in the territory.

Being governor of the sprawling Upper Louisiana
Territory proved challenging. In 1808, St. Louis was still a rowdy
frontier town on the edge of a wilderness, whose dominant business
was the fur trade. Lewis was often attacked by factions in St. Louis,
many of whom were interested in wresting land from the former French
inhabitants. Lewis was frequently at odds with
Gen. James Wilkinson, the top ranking officer in the U.S. Army,
and even his own Lt. Governor, Frederick Bates, who openly conspired
against him and insulted him in public. There is evidence that Lewis
supported editor Joseph Charless and his Missouri Gazette, the first
and only newspaper in St. Louis at the time, to counteract propaganda
put forth by his political enemies. Lewis failed at many aspects
of the governorship, however, most notably in the public perception
of how he spent official government funds. His involvement in the
St. Louis-Missouri River Fur Company, and its funding by the U.S.
Government, was questioned, as was money spent on a draft for official
purposes, for which Lewis had not been given advance authorization.

In an effort to explain his actions, Lewis
decided to make the long journey to Washington, D.C. to try to clear
his name. In early September 1809 he began his trip down the Mississippi
River and arrived at Fort Pickering (in modern-day Memphis, Tennessee)
on September 15. On September 29, he left the fort and planned to
follow the Natchez Trace, a heavily-traveled wilderness road. Accompanying
him on horseback was Major James Neely, Lewis’ servant Pernier,
and Neely’s servant. After a few days' travel the group stopped
at Grinder’s Stand to stay the night. This back country inn, a cluster
of log cabins and shacks, was located near present day Hohenwald,
Tennessee, about seventy-two miles from Nashville.

In the early morning hours of October 11,
1809, shots rang out in the Grinder's Stand cabin where Lewis was
staying. To this day it is not completely certain what happened.
It is known that Governor Lewis died of two gunshot wounds, one
to the head, the other to the chest. He was only 35 years old. Most
historians believe that Meriwether Lewis committed suicide due to
depression and problems in his life and career, while a popular
belief continues that he was murdered, perhaps by representatives
of his political enemies. The explorer was buried not far from where
he died, and today a memorial along the Natchez Trace National Historic
Trail pays tribute to the man who led the Voyage of Discovery to
the Pacific Ocean. Lewis died without clearing his name, without
publishing the journals which were his claim to international importance,
and unmarried, with no descendants to continue his legacy. Although
unrealized during his lifetime, Meriwether Lewis' accomplishments
were numerous, and they made an enormous impact on our country’s
perceptions and knowledge of the West.